parseFloat() in javascript

     The parseFloat() function parses a string argument and returns a floating point number. parseFloat is a top-level function and is not associated with any object.

     parseFloat parses its argument, a string, and returns a floating point number. If it encounters a character other than a sign (+ or -), numeral (0-9), a decimal point, or an exponent, it returns the value up to that point and ignores that character and all succeeding characters. Leading and trailing spaces are allowed.

     If the first character cannot be converted to a number, parseFloat returns NaN.

     For arithmetic purposes, the NaN value is not a number in any radix. You can call the isNaN function to determine if the result of parseFloat is NaN. If NaN is passed on to arithmetic operations, the operation results will also be NaN.

     parseFloat can also parse and return the value Infinity. You can use the isFinite function to determine if the result is a finite number (not Infinity, -Infinity, or NaN).

Syntax

   parseFloat(string);
The following all examples are return 3.14
Example

   parseFloat("3.14");
   parseFloat("314e-2");
   parseFloat("0.0314E+2");
   parseFloat("3.14more non-digit characters");


Example Program:- (Editor)


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